How do you grate your coconut soap?

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Siloe89

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Hello,

I make 100% coconut soap and grate it. I use an electric kitchen grater, but I am affraid of breaking it, as the soap is very hard.

What graters do you use for your soap?

I also wonder what grater allows you to make those nice flakes. My soap does not resemble flakes at all.

Thanks for tips!
 
What is your purpose? Is this for laundry? For rebatching?

When I grate mine for laundry, I use the grater attachment for my KitchenAid. I just got a mini food processor; if my powder isn't fine enough, I wait until it's dry and then pulse it a few times in the food processor.

A lot of people here seem to use a "salad shooter" purchased at yard sales and thrift shops.
 
What is your purpose? Is this for laundry? For rebatching?

When I grate mine for laundry, I use the grater attachment for my KitchenAid. I just got a mini food processor; if my powder isn't fine enough, I wait until it's dry and then pulse it a few times in the food processor.

A lot of people here seem to use a "salad shooter" purchased at yard sales and thrift shops.

Very useful info, Thank you!
 
I use a hand held cheese grater. I'm always afraid coconut soap it too hard for a salad shooter.
Not sure what you mean by flakes, my greatest soap is usually powdery
 
Are you letting the soap cure before grating it? If so, you need to grate the soap sooner. You want the soap to be like firm cheddar cheese -- not rock hard (but not soft and sticky either). The timing depends on your particular soap. I usually grate my soap at 12-24 hours, but others wait a little longer.

If you grate as soon as I do, you may want to wear gloves when handling the soap, because the soap may still have a bit of active lye at that point.

Some people use a "salad shooter" but I use my food processor with the grater disk.
 
I grate it as soon as it is hard enough to take it out, then use regular grater, then I cure it on trays for three weeks less or more. Then it goes to my old food processor and I make a powder......
 
I use something like this to grate mine. Makes it resemble mozzarella cheese. Easier to do within 8 hours of the original pour.

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I grate mine in a food processor. You can often get them for cheap at estate sales - generally people at estate sales are looking for cool vintage type items, not basic household items. I got mine for $5.

I also like a salad shooter for rebatching, but for laundry you need finer bits.
 
I just grated seven pounds with a very small hand-held paddle grater like the below. I strongly advise a pyramid grater like Kamahido posted above, or a food processor to turn it into small shards. For coconut soap, I'd do that as soon as it has the consistency of a hard cheese or a little more.

Mine was half lard, half tallow for laundry soap, grated less than 24 hours after making the stuff. After a month of curing time, I'll send it through the food processor to reduce the little soap squiggles to a fine powder.


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